ASHEVILLE - Buncombe County officials announced late Friday they intend to end any business relationship with the engineer federal prosecutors say was at the center of a bribes-for-contracts scheme with top county staff members.

The announcement also said the county would stop negotiations with CDM Smith, the company for which the engineer, Joe Wiseman, once worked and which was vying to take over a contract for an unspecified amount of maintenance and construction at the county landfill.

The statement also said the county Board of Commissioners would meet Tuesday to "terminate any open contracts with Joe Wiseman Jr. and/or any and all entities with which he is or has been affiliated."

The county’s move Friday follows a federal indictment this week alleging a former contractor provided ex-county manager Wanda Greene and former assistant county managers Jon Creighton and Mandy Stone with pricey trips, sporting event tickets and other gifts including thousands of dollars in wine in exchange for county contracts.

Commissioners later confirmed the contractor was Wiseman.

Greene, Creighton and Stone have been charged with a series of federal crimes, including aiding and abetting, conspiracy to defraud the federal government and receipt of bribes and kickbacks.

Documents obtained Friday by the Citizen Times through a public records request show Wiseman had even more county projects than earlier revealed in federal documents.

Those contracts include work at the new Buncombe County Judicial Complex and on controversial riverside land once intended for a brewery.

The records also reveal the name of a third company for which Wiseman worked, but which federal indictments only identify as "Company B."

The documents give more details about the contracts federal prosecutors say were handed out by Greene. Those include agreed-upon payments to Wiseman's companies and the wording that allowed the county to end the contracts if Wiseman left the company.

County commissioners had ordered a review of all contracts that went through Wiseman.

Wiseman, who lives in Roswell, Georgia, has not returned an email or multiple phone calls seeking comment. A call Friday went straight to his voicemail.

Wiseman was not named in the indictment and was referred to only as "the Contractor." He has not been charged, though investigators have had access to his detailed business records, according to the indictments.

He obtained $15 million in work for three companies during the "relevant time period," a release from the office of U.S. Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina Andrew Murray said Tuesday.

The indictments name contracts at the landfill, as well as commissioning of new county buildings and structures.

As of Tuesday, Wiseman's company Environmental Infrastructure Consulting still had the contract for overseeing construction and maintenance at the landfill. That was the day the indictments alleged his involvement what prosecutors described as a bribery scheme.

Before that, CDM Smith had held the contract. At the time Wiseman worked for the Boston-based company and oversaw the work at the landfill.

He left CDM Smith and started Environmental Infrastructure Consulting. That company didn't reapply for the landfill contract and on July 10 commissioners voted to start negotiations with CDM Smith.

But Friday's announcement said commissioners would "terminate unsuccessful negotiations for professional services" with the company.

CDM Smith officials did not respond to a message seeking comment.

The documents obtained by the Citizen Times show Wiseman got work on projects not named in the indictments, including the judicial complex, Ferry Road land on the French Broad River and an environmental assessment for property next to Roberson High.

The indictments don't say those projects were part of the alleged scheme.

The documents Buncombe released in response to the Citizen Times public records request were incomplete and didn't include parts requested for contracts relating to the county landfill.

Buncombe Public Information officer Kassi Day said Friday "more contracts were still being gathered."

There were no change orders or additional invoices in the returned documents that would show charges beyond contract prices.

The contract for the judicial complex was signed Sept. 8, 2011, by Creighton and Wiseman when he was a senior associate with Camp Dresser and McKee, which later became known as CDM Smith.

"The county desires for the new four-story, 100,000 square Courts Building addition to be LEED certified and thus is contracting with the ENGINEER to peform LEED fundamental commissioning services," the contract said.

LEED certification shows a building has less of an environmental impact through things such as low energy usage or low carbon emissions.

Among the engineer's responsibilities would be conducting reviews of the design process, performing two site visits to "observe component and system installations," and observing "functional tests of components and systems."

For that the company was to be paid $59,600.

It's not clear if Wiseman did the work himself or it was another company employee or subcontractor.

An $8,300 contract was signed April 7, 2014, for an environmental assessment at county property at 102 Springside Road. The county bought the property a month later for $200,000 for potential expansion of Roberson High.

That contract was signed by Creighton and Wiseman's boss at the time Wayne Marshall, principal of Petra Engineering.

That document is the first to name the third company for which Wiseman worked. While the indictments didn't name any of the three companies, public records and other sources made two of the companies known. But the only clue about Company B was that it was based in Huntersville, which is where Petra is located.

Marshall didn't respond to a call and email Friday seeking comment.

On May 15, 2014, Creigton signed a contract with Wiseman who was by then president Environmental Infrastructure Consulting. Wiseman was to get $5,000 for an environmental assessment of land on Ferry Road.

The county bought the 172 acres on the French Broad for $6.8 million in 2015, using it to try to lure the Oregon-based brewer Deschutes. But the deal fell through amid partisan fighting among commissioners and the company chose a Virginia site for its new Eastern facility.

Other contracts obtained in the request had been named in the indictments. Price breakdowns were: $43,400 for LEED commissioning of the Multi Purpose Building at Asheville Buncombe Technical Community College; $96,250 for LEED commissioning at the Allied Health Building, also at the college; and $49,000 for "commissioning services" at the county firing range.

Prosecutors specifically named those projects as part of the scheme in which Wiseman provided lavish vacations, meals, hotel stays and other gifts to top county officials in exchange for contracts.

The biggest contract returned in the public records request was for overall building commissioning services of the Allied Health Building for $348,895. That was set up in March 6, 2013, when Wiseman worked for CDM.

Many of the contracts included the clauses allowing the county to back out of Wiseman left the company.

"If Mr. Wiseman becomes disassociated from EIC for any reason and is no longer the project manager for this agreement, the county may terminate the agreement and immediately for cause and without penalty," was the wording in one